Before the movie was ever made, he told me this. I hate the fact that the movie was made. Or at least I hate that the movie was given the title that it was given. It cheapens the impact of the statement. It renders it derivative when it was original at its time of being spoken. Perhaps not original. Perhaps that is memory playing tricks or lack of knowledge coloring recollections. But it was not common.
My father was on a hospital bed very much like the one he died on. He was in a hospital room very much like the one he died in. He was in the hospital that he eventually died in. My mother was there. Sitting on the bed with him. Her left hand, or rather the nails of the fingers of her left hand, traced what must have been, by then, a decades long rotation through the hairline that almost reached the back of his neck.
A decision had been made to touch him like that, in that spot, at that speed, with that force, with that repetition. It was a decision reached perhaps verbally or perhaps not. It was a decision made by two friends and two partners and two lovers and two parents and two enemies and two spouses - all those things that apply to an old married couple of 27 years. It was a decision. Two consciousnesses focused on this and agreed - this offered comfort and pleasure in the binary. This was something they both enjoyed and they both decided that this was something that would be done.
The beauty, as I saw then and as I might be the only to see, was that the decision was not made that day or the days leading to that day. This comfort, this pleasure, this absent minded mingling of one to one was decided upon years and years ago - perhaps, probably, before the existence of its sole independent witness - me - on this day so long ago. My mother's hand played with the short hairs on the nape of my father's neck.
The window was open and cool air was blowing in softly. It would have been fall, was probably fall - spring time in south Georgia could be unbearably hot. But it could have been spring I suppose. My dad was leaned up in his hospital bed with my mother sitting beside him and me sitting at the foot of his bed. The air from outside smelled of pine trees. My mother was noticeable happy - obviously happy - for a moment obliviously happy. I smiled.
Years ago my father had told his doctor that he had to be left hope. An interesting request. To be left with hope. Knowing, at some point, that request devolves to "lie to me".
My mother told me once over burgers at Wendy's - Wendy's was close to the hospital - she told me, "Your daddy told me the other day, 'Mama, they are gonna start keeping things from me soon. You are gonna have to go out and ask them if you want to know more.'"
I shifted the last bite of my burger to my cheek and asked with the taste of mustard and ketchup and beef and onion cascading through the cavities of my skull, "What did you say?"
"I smiled," she said, "and I said, 'I'll listen to what they tell you.'" I saw her eyes grow wetter and recognized the trick I did to tighten the cords of my throat to bite down, to back down, tears and crying.
"They have been keeping things from him for months now."
I bit my burger. I chewed my burger. I swallowed my burger. I counted on the act of eating to mask the tightening of the cords in my neck.
I knew they had. I knew he was dying. I think (I almost typed, "I like to think...", but ) I think that he knew he was dying. But that conversation kinda disproves that. Think on that - the medical professionals were dancing around the truth. For us. For him.
Mrs. Page at church, when she eulogized him at the end of the year, the way she eulogized all members who died during the course of the year, described him as charming. He must have been. I found him so but that is not evidence. No. That is found in the nurses who told my mother before and after his passing (death) that they hoped / prayed / were thankful that they were not working when they called CODE on his room.
My sister-in-law acted through her sister to get us to address a living will. But she acted through me. I was the oldest. That was why. That had to by why. Right? It wasn't because I was the coldest. It was because I was the STRONGEST - ha! Sorry. Self deception only goes so far. But I was the one that took the form and listened through not - quite - Charlie Brown teacher - jazz horn - instructions. I was the one that led my family through the form. I wonder if they heard me as something just less or just more than a jazz horn trying to find syllables.
We completed the form. We signed the form. We were SERIOUS. There was DECORUM. There was also butterflies dripping with acid circling through stomachs.
The doctor came in and went over the form and the whole family nodded absently at the notions that we had just initialed and then signed and then dated. He walked us through each line by final final final
line.
They would not do CPR. They would not put him on an artificial heart. And we nodded. They would not do CPR. They would not put him on a respirator. And we nodded. They would not do CPR. They would not seek to sustain his life through artificial means. And we nodded. They would not do CPR. They would not do CPR. They would not do CPR. They would not do CPR. THEY WOULD NOT DO CPR! THEY WOULD NOT DO CPR! THEY WOULD NOT DO CPR! THEY WOULD NOT DO CPR!
"Um."
As the start of one of those sentences that you have to say, as the start of THE sentence you have to say (and at that time, it was THE sentence that had to be said) it was an admittedly poor start.
But that is the way I started it. "Um,"
I paused. It was not to gather my thoughts. It was a stalling tactic. I knew someone else would say what I wanted to say. I just needed to drop the "um" to stall the inevitable, morbid momentum to give them the breathing space to say the obvious. But the silence it did not echo. It, the silence, turned on me. Nobody said a word as doctor, nurses, sisters-in law, brothers, mother, and
father
turned
to look
at me.
"No CPR?"
The LOOK continued. I knew what had to be said. Didn't they know what had to be said? If ALL knew what HAD to be said, then just asking the question and pausing.
But no. They don't see it. I had to say what had to be said. I had to say it in front of him. A continuously shrinking part of me hates them all for their blank stares and their simplicity.
"I agree. No tubes or machines. No postponing the inevitable. But no CPR? To have the en...
To have," LOOK AT HIM, "to have you in pain and fear and to have them come to this room and do nothing? To have them watch? To have them safe behind this piece of paper with my name on it to watch with no responsibility to help? To leave you there frightened and alone? NO. Just no. They have to help. They have to come to you. They have to do what hands can do. They have to be here for you."
It made everyone just as uncomfortable as you think it did. I took my eyes off of his only long enough to find my mother's - she was watching him - she would hate me for this only to the extent that this caused him pain - she does not hate me - that brings a comfort.
I looked at my two brothers and neither met my gaze. If they had met my gaze that day, I might have found the courage to ask later what they were thinking, but, alas...
The typed up orders have a line drawn through them. The doctor's barely legible scribble is written above the orders with all of our signatures at the bottom of the page. It states that CPR shall be administered but that not other efforts shall be expended. These were the written rules of my father's passing from this world to the next.
But the air smelled of pine. My mother's nailed traced an all too familiar tattoo through the hairline of my father's neck. I sat at his feet and ran my finger down the scar that traced across most of his foot from when a chain saw had almost given him the nickname "Stumpie".
"Why are you ashamed of me?" I asked. The question was an evil, evil lie. I knew my father was dying. I knew the days were short. I knew that we had all taken steps to be sure he never knew how close the finish line was.
I watched his eyes grow large. Felt shame as they moistened. Watched as his jaw tightened and the cords in his throat tightened. I saw my mother freeze. No expression. Barely breathing. Her hand settled gently at the base of his neck. No one had yet held mine from that position in that way yet - I had no idea how comforting that was.
"I love you," he said.
I was ready for this. I knew this. I counted on this the same way I counted on oxygen to be in the next breath I inhaled - only I was more thankful for it.
"Love ain't pride. Why are you ashamed of me?"
"I love you. You have the whole future open to you. You have A BEAUTIFUL MIND. There is nothing that is beyond you if you will apply yourself. Don't be petty. Don't be small. Don't limit yourself to my horizons. Be bigger than that. You have a beautiful mind - don't be afraid of where it leads you. Be greater than what came before you. Don't be afraid. Don't be small."
"But if you don't do a damn thing else in life - I am proud of you."
I hugged him. He hugged me.
My mother smelled something rotten in Denmark.
"Why did you think we were ashamed of you?"
"Besides the obvious?" I deflected.
"Besides
The
Obvious."
She met my eyes without anger. There was not understanding there either. Legitimate confusion.
"I know you were never ashamed. I just wanted you to say you were proud of me. I wanted to hear it."
My parents were flabbergasted in the most honest attribution of the word.
I was satisfied and disgusted with myself at the same time.
As I grow older, as I find more and more things that I wonder how my father would have judged, I grow more satisfied and less and less disgusted.
A beautiful mind. A fantastic compliment. A daunting challenge. A horrible movie title.
Well. Maybe not horrible. Probably not a terribly manipulative title. That is a positive.
Wednesday, January 8, 2014
Wednesday, January 1, 2014
Whispers
She hears the whispers and does her best to ignore them. But they tell her so many things. Pretty little poems and stories that fascinate and arouse. She loves that part of it. That part is all roses and rhymes. That part is special and while not quite innocent, at least harmless. She remembers everything during these softer times of the whispers. She has even become adept at listening to these silky aspects of the whispers while never letting on to anyone around her that anything was amiss.
But then the whispers are not always harmless. They know things. They share small pieces... slivers of knowledge. The whispers know... They just know. People lie. They tell you what you want to hear when they are friendly and they will say the most God awful things when they want to be cruel. But the whispers know the truth some how. They know and they share. They share even when she does not want to know. They don't care about her happiness. Indeed, she would be happier if she did not know the secrets of those around her.
The whispers tell stories of cowards parading as men and the venal pretending to virginity. The whispers know. They know and they have to tell and they can't be silenced.
But then the whispers are not always harmless. They know things. They share small pieces... slivers of knowledge. The whispers know... They just know. People lie. They tell you what you want to hear when they are friendly and they will say the most God awful things when they want to be cruel. But the whispers know the truth some how. They know and they share. They share even when she does not want to know. They don't care about her happiness. Indeed, she would be happier if she did not know the secrets of those around her.
The whispers tell stories of cowards parading as men and the venal pretending to virginity. The whispers know. They know and they have to tell and they can't be silenced.
Wednesday, December 25, 2013
Merry Christmas
I am not ashamed to say that I am an unreformed Grinch / Scrooge. I never really get in the Christmas spirit. I like the song Little Drummer Boy and it can get me from somber to misty-eyed too quick, but the rest of the Christmas songs just annoy me as they blare from department store speakers. I absolutely HATE decorating a tree - one of the few deeply emotional rifts between my tree loving wife and me.
I had wonderful Christmases as a kid. I have no idea how my mother was able to put so many things beneath the tree for us three boys. My parents did not have a lot of money and were not credit card type people. We got toy fork lifts from Tonka with forks that raised up and down from a crank at the top of the overhead guard. We got an Atari that featured Pong and the militaristic prep test, Tank Pong. We got cap pistols with fake leather holsters, cameras with something called film, tape players that played tapes of Olivia Newton John and Michael Jackson and Duran Duran. We got a Commodore 64 that played Wing Commander and did absolutely NOTHING else EVER.
And I give almost all of that credit to my mom. My dad would sit and drink his coffee and smile at our excitement but also shake his head at the excess. Mom had saved the money all year and was determined to spend every cent of it on us. Dad could not help but see it as a waste.
Which causes me to shake my head. Dad was no stranger to wasting money and was pretty incapable of saving too much at any given time. I inherited these traits from him and feel only a passing guilt at outing him about them. AAAANNND, truth to tell, they are not why I shake my head.
One of the things that sticks out in my memory is a time when I had been so rancorous and disagreeable and ungrateful that my father had to tell me just how good I had it. I had been fighting with Mom - because that is what we did from the time I was 13 until I was 19. He told me that I had two parents who loved me and would do almost anything to protect me. I had a family around me. I had all the necessities of life and many of the comforts too.
And then he said how he envied me. I had my mother a full ten years longer than he had his. He remembered being a little boy and losing his breath as his mother tickled him. He also remembered being a little boy and standing on a wooden tomato crate so he could look into the window of the tuberculosis hospital and see his mother's face. And it was not a straight on view. An aunt held up a hand mirror so that his mother's face was reflected back at him. That was the last time he ever saw his mama. He was five years old.
He continued to tell me how over the next year he was trying to hold the attention of another of his aunts to tell her what he wanted for Christmas. His voice broke as he said,"And I realized, she just didn't care." The emotion was raw and red on his face and the muscles in his jaw shivered under the pressure. My mom said in her most reassuring and placating and loving and softest voice, "Ray..."
And at the sound of her voice you could see the calm slowly flow back over his features. I was in shock. My eyes were wet and my mouth was open and I was ashamed that I had led my father to that memory. I also sat in awe at how easily and mysteriously my mother's voice speaking his name had soothed it all so completely. I could never figure out how that happened, how it worked, until I met Priscilla.
So.
My father's ambivalence and sometimes even mild hostility at the extravagance of the Christmases provided by my mother were and remain a mystery to me.
I called Mom this morning to make sure that other things did not remain a mystery for me. I realized this morning that I knew nothing about any Christmas my mom had as a kid. So I called today and asked.
Turns out that every year she and her sister Geraldine got about the same gifts since they were so close in age. Every year they would get a doll of some sort. One of the more memorable dolls was "Betsy Wetsy". It was the first doll she got that would take a bottle and later wet herself.
When I had first asked her the question, she started telling me things about how everyone would go over to Grandma's house on Christmas day to eat. They would not exchange too many presents but Grandma would fix the turkey and dressing and everyone else was expected to bring some sort of side. My mother being my mother, gave me the list of folks who came over to eat their fill and had not had the decency to bring so much as left overs to the event. I smiled at the remembered faux pas from what must be 50 years ago now. That's my mama!
It took her a while to get back to her childhood. She told how they were too poor to have the fancy stockings for decoration but still hung their actual socks up on the mantle. They always got an orange in their sock, she said wistfully. And nuts she said. Not a package of nuts, but nuts in shells so hard you had to have a nutcracker.
One year she had made known that she wanted a chalk board with an easel. She then went off topic (again, that's my mama!) to tell me how Granny Ethel used the area under a bed as a storage area. You could never hide under a bed in comfort during a game of hide and seek because you had to share the space with everything that later generations would have in an attic, basement, or garage. I was not prepared to find that this tangent tied back in to the main story she was telling - they almost never do.
But this time she pointed out that she found the chalk board and easel wrapped in a comforter under one of the beds. She then visited the chalk board and easel every day until Christmas. She never set it up or wrote anything on it. Just took it from its hiding spot once per day, looked at it, re-wrapped it in the comforter and returned it to its hiding spot. She never told Granny Ethel that she had found it. EVER. I find that endearing.
We talked about one of her sisters who would come up from Florida. If she did not bring something already prepared, she would cook in Granny Ethel's kitchen. She was the sister that Granny Ethel bought a box of chocolate covered cherries for every Christmas. They were never a surprise but rather a topic of conversation in the weeks leading up to the holiday.
This aunt, like the rest of her sisters, my mother included, was married to an alcoholic. I asked if he was drinking during the holidays. Would he drink in front of Grandpa Homer and Granny Ethel?
"Oh yes," was the reply. "He would sit there with his bottle,"
"His bottle? He wouldn't even have it in a glass?"
"Sometimes his chaser would be in a glass."
I asked if my father drank in front of Homer and Ethel. "Not that I can remember. I don't think so."
I have NO doubts about the honesty of those answers. My mother will tell you the uncomfortable truth even when you wish she wouldn't. I also have very little doubt that to put up with Ethel, my dad probably arrived AFTER having had a sufficient amount of social lubrication.
Again, I am Grinch before the heart inflammation and Scrooge before the ghosts showed up and I don't precisely know why. My Savior was not born on this date. That was sometime in April if you look at the history. We just had an emperor somewhere along the line hijack the winter solstice celebrations from the pagans. I look at the Christmas Tree and I wonder if it qualifies as an idol just like the golden calf that the Israelis made out pinkie rings.
I work in the warehousing arm of a major retailer and we jump through hoops to get televisions, head phones, treadmills, mixers, paper plates, plastic cups, X boxes, video games, and cookies out to the stores every year. It is long hours and tight deadlines and PRESSURE every year.
I live away from home and having changed jobs a couple times in the past 3 years, I have not had the vacation days to go home for Christmas in quite a while. My dad is gone. Died just around Thanksgiving in 1995.
But I do know that God loved us enough that he sent his only Son to save us. I know that shepherds were visited by a choir of angels who sang at His birth. I know three wise men followed a star and greeted the new born King and were not fooled by the humble surroundings. I know they brought priceless gifts to offer. And I know we emulate God's graciousness and the generosity of the wise men by giving gifts to one another.
I have never gotten frankincense or myrrh but I have looked goofy in some gold chains over the years. But I don't feel slighted in the least. The Baby Jesus never got to play Pong!
Merry Christmas!
I had wonderful Christmases as a kid. I have no idea how my mother was able to put so many things beneath the tree for us three boys. My parents did not have a lot of money and were not credit card type people. We got toy fork lifts from Tonka with forks that raised up and down from a crank at the top of the overhead guard. We got an Atari that featured Pong and the militaristic prep test, Tank Pong. We got cap pistols with fake leather holsters, cameras with something called film, tape players that played tapes of Olivia Newton John and Michael Jackson and Duran Duran. We got a Commodore 64 that played Wing Commander and did absolutely NOTHING else EVER.
And I give almost all of that credit to my mom. My dad would sit and drink his coffee and smile at our excitement but also shake his head at the excess. Mom had saved the money all year and was determined to spend every cent of it on us. Dad could not help but see it as a waste.
Which causes me to shake my head. Dad was no stranger to wasting money and was pretty incapable of saving too much at any given time. I inherited these traits from him and feel only a passing guilt at outing him about them. AAAANNND, truth to tell, they are not why I shake my head.
One of the things that sticks out in my memory is a time when I had been so rancorous and disagreeable and ungrateful that my father had to tell me just how good I had it. I had been fighting with Mom - because that is what we did from the time I was 13 until I was 19. He told me that I had two parents who loved me and would do almost anything to protect me. I had a family around me. I had all the necessities of life and many of the comforts too.
And then he said how he envied me. I had my mother a full ten years longer than he had his. He remembered being a little boy and losing his breath as his mother tickled him. He also remembered being a little boy and standing on a wooden tomato crate so he could look into the window of the tuberculosis hospital and see his mother's face. And it was not a straight on view. An aunt held up a hand mirror so that his mother's face was reflected back at him. That was the last time he ever saw his mama. He was five years old.
He continued to tell me how over the next year he was trying to hold the attention of another of his aunts to tell her what he wanted for Christmas. His voice broke as he said,"And I realized, she just didn't care." The emotion was raw and red on his face and the muscles in his jaw shivered under the pressure. My mom said in her most reassuring and placating and loving and softest voice, "Ray..."
And at the sound of her voice you could see the calm slowly flow back over his features. I was in shock. My eyes were wet and my mouth was open and I was ashamed that I had led my father to that memory. I also sat in awe at how easily and mysteriously my mother's voice speaking his name had soothed it all so completely. I could never figure out how that happened, how it worked, until I met Priscilla.
So.
My father's ambivalence and sometimes even mild hostility at the extravagance of the Christmases provided by my mother were and remain a mystery to me.
I called Mom this morning to make sure that other things did not remain a mystery for me. I realized this morning that I knew nothing about any Christmas my mom had as a kid. So I called today and asked.
Turns out that every year she and her sister Geraldine got about the same gifts since they were so close in age. Every year they would get a doll of some sort. One of the more memorable dolls was "Betsy Wetsy". It was the first doll she got that would take a bottle and later wet herself.
When I had first asked her the question, she started telling me things about how everyone would go over to Grandma's house on Christmas day to eat. They would not exchange too many presents but Grandma would fix the turkey and dressing and everyone else was expected to bring some sort of side. My mother being my mother, gave me the list of folks who came over to eat their fill and had not had the decency to bring so much as left overs to the event. I smiled at the remembered faux pas from what must be 50 years ago now. That's my mama!
It took her a while to get back to her childhood. She told how they were too poor to have the fancy stockings for decoration but still hung their actual socks up on the mantle. They always got an orange in their sock, she said wistfully. And nuts she said. Not a package of nuts, but nuts in shells so hard you had to have a nutcracker.
One year she had made known that she wanted a chalk board with an easel. She then went off topic (again, that's my mama!) to tell me how Granny Ethel used the area under a bed as a storage area. You could never hide under a bed in comfort during a game of hide and seek because you had to share the space with everything that later generations would have in an attic, basement, or garage. I was not prepared to find that this tangent tied back in to the main story she was telling - they almost never do.
But this time she pointed out that she found the chalk board and easel wrapped in a comforter under one of the beds. She then visited the chalk board and easel every day until Christmas. She never set it up or wrote anything on it. Just took it from its hiding spot once per day, looked at it, re-wrapped it in the comforter and returned it to its hiding spot. She never told Granny Ethel that she had found it. EVER. I find that endearing.
We talked about one of her sisters who would come up from Florida. If she did not bring something already prepared, she would cook in Granny Ethel's kitchen. She was the sister that Granny Ethel bought a box of chocolate covered cherries for every Christmas. They were never a surprise but rather a topic of conversation in the weeks leading up to the holiday.
This aunt, like the rest of her sisters, my mother included, was married to an alcoholic. I asked if he was drinking during the holidays. Would he drink in front of Grandpa Homer and Granny Ethel?
"Oh yes," was the reply. "He would sit there with his bottle,"
"His bottle? He wouldn't even have it in a glass?"
"Sometimes his chaser would be in a glass."
I asked if my father drank in front of Homer and Ethel. "Not that I can remember. I don't think so."
I have NO doubts about the honesty of those answers. My mother will tell you the uncomfortable truth even when you wish she wouldn't. I also have very little doubt that to put up with Ethel, my dad probably arrived AFTER having had a sufficient amount of social lubrication.
Again, I am Grinch before the heart inflammation and Scrooge before the ghosts showed up and I don't precisely know why. My Savior was not born on this date. That was sometime in April if you look at the history. We just had an emperor somewhere along the line hijack the winter solstice celebrations from the pagans. I look at the Christmas Tree and I wonder if it qualifies as an idol just like the golden calf that the Israelis made out pinkie rings.
I work in the warehousing arm of a major retailer and we jump through hoops to get televisions, head phones, treadmills, mixers, paper plates, plastic cups, X boxes, video games, and cookies out to the stores every year. It is long hours and tight deadlines and PRESSURE every year.
I live away from home and having changed jobs a couple times in the past 3 years, I have not had the vacation days to go home for Christmas in quite a while. My dad is gone. Died just around Thanksgiving in 1995.
But I do know that God loved us enough that he sent his only Son to save us. I know that shepherds were visited by a choir of angels who sang at His birth. I know three wise men followed a star and greeted the new born King and were not fooled by the humble surroundings. I know they brought priceless gifts to offer. And I know we emulate God's graciousness and the generosity of the wise men by giving gifts to one another.
I have never gotten frankincense or myrrh but I have looked goofy in some gold chains over the years. But I don't feel slighted in the least. The Baby Jesus never got to play Pong!
Merry Christmas!
Wednesday, November 13, 2013
Chapter 3 - When It All Works Just Right
He dressed in his nicest outfit that his mother had not had a hand in picking out. A navy blue shirt with long sleeves, grey slacks with a matching grey sports coat. He wore no tie but only because he thought it would be more pretentious to not wear one. He carried his money in a small brief case that was much older than his suit. His mother had not had a hand in putting the money together either.
He rapped on the door the way he had heard so many others do it. It sounded different on this side of the door. He saw the small window in the door open and just as he expected, it closed almost immediately. He did not bother to knock again. He could imagine even now how the sight of him had sent someone scurrying. He had picked this moment carefully. His mother was not in town.
She had trained all her people well. They knew what to do with an unruly client or a dishonest employee or the unexpected interest of law enforcement. They were good and smart and able to think for themselves or they would not have worked for Ms.Wetta. But he was gambling that they did not have a plan for what to do when the boss's 15 year old son came knocking at the door. And for the most part, for most of them, he was right. But then, there was Ginger.
Even today in rural Texas it is not a common occurrence to run across someone who speaks with a British accent. Even more unusual to find a black man with such an accent. Travel back 30 years in time and your odds of meeting Gerald Hawthorne dwindle even more. But if you were a poker player, and if you played high stakes, and if you were not particular about certain legalities, then there was almost 100% chance that you met Gerald "Ginger" Hawthorne.
The little window opened again and a black face filled the little square. "What the hell are you doing here?"
"Why do we even have this little window in the door anyway? Cops who know enough to knock on this door will just knock it down the second the little window closes. It is useless. An affectation."
Ginger smiled. He could tell Ginger was smiling even without being able to see his lips or his teeth. His eyes had changed in a way that told him that Ginger was smiling.
Ginger smiled. The boy had taken his best growl and swatted it away as if it was nothing. And had done it in a way that was not threatening or antagonistic. Fearless and smooth. He was almost as good as his mother hoped he would be.
"People who come here have certain expectations. They will play their part of high roller if we play our part of purveyor of forbidden fruit. Now, boy, why are you here?"
"I know, Ginger. I know and I have proof. And not to be too childish, 'I will tell Momma on you' if you don't let me in."
Ginger wasn't smiling. Neither was the boy. The boy was sweating. Sweating was too strong a word. The boy glistened. It was a tell. But of what? Ginger could only imagine. The boy stood there and went through all the numbers he had memorized for this moment. He knew he was sweating and hated that the moment had over whelmed him, but he was watching all of Ginger's face that he could see.
Ginger's face changed. It lost all evidence of humor and sufferance. The boy blurted out, " The drink's at the whore houses are free but we still have to buy the liquor."
Ginger's look changed again. The boy suspected but would not know until years later that Ginger was genuinely impressed. There was silence until the little window closed and the door opened and he was in.
The young boy had found out about Ginger months ago. He was not looking for anything on Ginger, but was going over all the books of all the family's less than reputable enterprises. It was not that the numbers did not make sense that had clued him in to Ginger's enterprise. Indeed, if they had not made sense, his mother and father would have tumbled to that fast enough. He was looking for ways to make money. He was looking for ways to steal from his mother. Three obvious ways made themselves readily apparent. Skim from the whores at the whorehouse. Risky, in that any of the girls could talk, but doable. Skimming off the poker tables. Again risky, with all the dealers having a cut of the house profits and could talk. Skimming from the dope trade. Riskiest of all because it would not just be Mother but the Aryan Nation or the Mexican Cartel who would have a problem with such an enterprise.
But the liquor at the whore houses. All of it was bought in bulk and distributed to each house. Drinks were free to each customer and even so, they were strictly metered out. But if there was a discount to be had for buying in such bulk? And if one paid for the expensive stuff on one set of books and got the cheap stuff in reality? There was a hard to trace profit margin for an enterprising thief. Imagine the boy's surprise to find that someone had beaten him to it.
He smiled at Ginger - his biggest, most innocent smile he could manage. Ginger smiled back. That was the wordless exchange. The boy had said,"I know you could kill me and make sure my body was never found." And Ginger had said, "I know you are smart enough to have arranged for everything to be delivered to your mother if you go missing. "
"So good to have you here, young sir. May I take your case?" asked Ginger. The case was handed over and the boy asked if he could have his full $5000.00 in chips delivered to the high roller no limit hold 'em table. Ginger led him to the table and just before the boy sat down, Ginger squeezed the collection of nerves between the neck and the shoulder. The pain was excruciating but brief and Ginger had used the force to guide him into his chair. There was another message delivered and very clearly received - Ginger was nobody's bitch.
The table held several of the wealthiest people in Houston. Some of those folks made their money honestly and some had not. There were some there who had played poker for 30 years and some that could barely shuffle cards. But this was one of those special nights. This was in the days before the internet and before poker was on television and before an air of respectability had glossed over the games less noble origins. Major players from Atlantic City and Las Vegas would slum it every once and a while to reel in big fish who thought they knew cards by playing one of the bigger illegal games. The best were found in Houston, Macon, GA or Phoenix, Ar.
Ms. Wetta's tables were a favorite. There was always big money in the room. Politeness was violently enforced. And a damn judge presided over the whole thing. It was perfect. Especially for an artist like Clay Diamond.
Clay was a legend. One of the very most famous godfathers of the game had called Clay the best poker player he had ever beaten. Clay told that story often. Never told about the three tourney's after that where he had busted the Godfather of Hold 'Em. But the boy knew about those games and those outcomes. He was impressed that Clay had never felt the need to brag about beating a legend.
He took his place at the table with Clay Diamond and seven others and exhaled slowly as he saw that all of them had much larger stacks of chips than his $5000.00. Except for Diamond who only had $4000.00 in front of him. The boy attempted to shed his anxiety - to transfer it by saying to Diamond,"Tough table to be the small stack."
"I didn't bring these to lose boy." And that set a tone for the table. People were polite but not friendly and certainly not conversational.
The rest of the table was easy - poker players that had rarely entered a game where they did not have a huge advantage in chips. They counted on being able to over whelm their opponents at key moments in the game to take chips. Slow play would trim away their chips slowly but surely. Diamond was the only threat - real threat - at this table. But they would be in a race to land as many of the other fish at the table as possible.
He had 5 grand in chips and a professional poker player sitting across from him and a table full of innocent by-standers. He and Clay were never in the same pot together for long. Each took turns bowing out to let the other alone with the fish. One would bet double the blind and the other would quickly fold or else raise it three times the blind as if clearing his throat and saying, "I think me and my Aces will take this one."
It took hours and the fish kept having the pleasing habit of buying back in for more and more chips as their drinks got stronger and their good sense got weaker. The boy had more than tripled his money and Diamond had was up over $20 grand in chips. "Kid, it looks to be time to stop dancing."
That was far more overt than the young man had thought would happen. It was a courtesy that was appreciated. From that moment on they played their cards as they were dealt regardless of which of them seemed to have the better cards. The boy had been careful to not always stay in when he was strong earlier in the game. He was counting on that to have covered any tells he had about his cards. He finally got what he wanted. A game with a huge pile of chips in front of him and his mother no where to be found.
He took the whole table once with 2/6 of clubs when he flopped a straight flush. He was embarrassed at how much he had smiled at that. He wasn't too happy - he just looked as happy as we really was. And that is dangerous in life as well as poker. He shook his head as he realized just how much of his mothers' lessons he had learned.
He hit a straight again and folded out when Diamond bet heavy on an obvious flush. Once everybody folded out of the hand, Diamond did something he never did before. He showed the table that he only had a 7 / J off suit - no flush. He went hard after Diamond an hour later with his own flush only to find him holding four deuces that he had slow played from the start.
It went like that for hour after hour. He called when Diamond wanted him to and he folded when Diamond wanted him to and could never pull off a bluff again to save his life. His stack of chips got smaller and smaller as shoulders tensed into cords like steel.
Ginger watched as the boys brow formed a scowl. Frustration was obvious on the boy's face. It was not easy to look at. Part of the boy's charm had been that he was always so cool under pressure. People liked him like that. They liked him as the cool, calm young man who had all the answers beyond his years. Because people liked the image of him as strong and assured, they filled in the holes when he wasn't quite so confident or a little less than assured.
Diamond did not find him charming at all. Ginger saw it as it was happening. The boy was betting too heavy when he had it and the desperation in his eyes confirmed it. When the flop went against him his shoulder fell - telegraphing it to the whole room. Well, maybe not to the rubes, but to Diamond for sure.
If Diamond felt any affection or connection to him, it did not show. It did not manifest itself in a hesitation before grasping his chips. It was not in his voice when he raised the bet nor in his eyes when he stared over his cards. The boy's eyes glistened as his chips slowly made their way across the table to Diamond.
That was when it happened. That's when the boy showed how small he could be - how petty. His chips, the last of his chips, were in the center of the table. "Do you know who I am, Diamond? How welcome do you think you will be at these tables if you bust me here at my own Mother's game?"
The others at the table looked down at their own folded cards or into the amber liquid in their glasses - anything to look at to avoid his shame. Diamond looked up at him and shook his head. "Kid, the one sure way to piss your mother off is for me to not take every dime you brought to this table. Call."
And with that the last of his chips found their way to Diamond and he noticed that Ginger had appeared at his shoulder. . He rose up from the table and did not seem to notice that Ginger was not leading him to the door but to the bar. He was sitting there with a Scotch already in front of him without ever seeing the bartender move.
"I never saw it coming. I never saw it coming."
Ginger did him the courtesy of not smiling at him. "Drink your Scotch kid. Slowly. Its the good stuff. There is a lesson you need to learn here. What is it?"
He sipped his Scotch and found comfort in the carmel and vanilla and burn. "It was too easy. Diamond in town and Mom out of town. It was too easy."
Ginger still did not smile. "Son, Its bigger than that. Your mama out of town, Diamond in town, you finding a way past me to in here, you having all those back room games that nobody told your mama about, a table full of fish with only one other shark at that table, you having access to your mama's books. Son, the lesson is that it never all works out just right. Never. Unless it is for your mama. When it all works out just right, that's your mama playing god."
End Chapter 3
He rapped on the door the way he had heard so many others do it. It sounded different on this side of the door. He saw the small window in the door open and just as he expected, it closed almost immediately. He did not bother to knock again. He could imagine even now how the sight of him had sent someone scurrying. He had picked this moment carefully. His mother was not in town.
She had trained all her people well. They knew what to do with an unruly client or a dishonest employee or the unexpected interest of law enforcement. They were good and smart and able to think for themselves or they would not have worked for Ms.Wetta. But he was gambling that they did not have a plan for what to do when the boss's 15 year old son came knocking at the door. And for the most part, for most of them, he was right. But then, there was Ginger.
Even today in rural Texas it is not a common occurrence to run across someone who speaks with a British accent. Even more unusual to find a black man with such an accent. Travel back 30 years in time and your odds of meeting Gerald Hawthorne dwindle even more. But if you were a poker player, and if you played high stakes, and if you were not particular about certain legalities, then there was almost 100% chance that you met Gerald "Ginger" Hawthorne.
The little window opened again and a black face filled the little square. "What the hell are you doing here?"
"Why do we even have this little window in the door anyway? Cops who know enough to knock on this door will just knock it down the second the little window closes. It is useless. An affectation."
Ginger smiled. He could tell Ginger was smiling even without being able to see his lips or his teeth. His eyes had changed in a way that told him that Ginger was smiling.
Ginger smiled. The boy had taken his best growl and swatted it away as if it was nothing. And had done it in a way that was not threatening or antagonistic. Fearless and smooth. He was almost as good as his mother hoped he would be.
"People who come here have certain expectations. They will play their part of high roller if we play our part of purveyor of forbidden fruit. Now, boy, why are you here?"
"I know, Ginger. I know and I have proof. And not to be too childish, 'I will tell Momma on you' if you don't let me in."
Ginger wasn't smiling. Neither was the boy. The boy was sweating. Sweating was too strong a word. The boy glistened. It was a tell. But of what? Ginger could only imagine. The boy stood there and went through all the numbers he had memorized for this moment. He knew he was sweating and hated that the moment had over whelmed him, but he was watching all of Ginger's face that he could see.
Ginger's face changed. It lost all evidence of humor and sufferance. The boy blurted out, " The drink's at the whore houses are free but we still have to buy the liquor."
Ginger's look changed again. The boy suspected but would not know until years later that Ginger was genuinely impressed. There was silence until the little window closed and the door opened and he was in.
The young boy had found out about Ginger months ago. He was not looking for anything on Ginger, but was going over all the books of all the family's less than reputable enterprises. It was not that the numbers did not make sense that had clued him in to Ginger's enterprise. Indeed, if they had not made sense, his mother and father would have tumbled to that fast enough. He was looking for ways to make money. He was looking for ways to steal from his mother. Three obvious ways made themselves readily apparent. Skim from the whores at the whorehouse. Risky, in that any of the girls could talk, but doable. Skimming off the poker tables. Again risky, with all the dealers having a cut of the house profits and could talk. Skimming from the dope trade. Riskiest of all because it would not just be Mother but the Aryan Nation or the Mexican Cartel who would have a problem with such an enterprise.
But the liquor at the whore houses. All of it was bought in bulk and distributed to each house. Drinks were free to each customer and even so, they were strictly metered out. But if there was a discount to be had for buying in such bulk? And if one paid for the expensive stuff on one set of books and got the cheap stuff in reality? There was a hard to trace profit margin for an enterprising thief. Imagine the boy's surprise to find that someone had beaten him to it.
He smiled at Ginger - his biggest, most innocent smile he could manage. Ginger smiled back. That was the wordless exchange. The boy had said,"I know you could kill me and make sure my body was never found." And Ginger had said, "I know you are smart enough to have arranged for everything to be delivered to your mother if you go missing. "
"So good to have you here, young sir. May I take your case?" asked Ginger. The case was handed over and the boy asked if he could have his full $5000.00 in chips delivered to the high roller no limit hold 'em table. Ginger led him to the table and just before the boy sat down, Ginger squeezed the collection of nerves between the neck and the shoulder. The pain was excruciating but brief and Ginger had used the force to guide him into his chair. There was another message delivered and very clearly received - Ginger was nobody's bitch.
The table held several of the wealthiest people in Houston. Some of those folks made their money honestly and some had not. There were some there who had played poker for 30 years and some that could barely shuffle cards. But this was one of those special nights. This was in the days before the internet and before poker was on television and before an air of respectability had glossed over the games less noble origins. Major players from Atlantic City and Las Vegas would slum it every once and a while to reel in big fish who thought they knew cards by playing one of the bigger illegal games. The best were found in Houston, Macon, GA or Phoenix, Ar.
Ms. Wetta's tables were a favorite. There was always big money in the room. Politeness was violently enforced. And a damn judge presided over the whole thing. It was perfect. Especially for an artist like Clay Diamond.
Clay was a legend. One of the very most famous godfathers of the game had called Clay the best poker player he had ever beaten. Clay told that story often. Never told about the three tourney's after that where he had busted the Godfather of Hold 'Em. But the boy knew about those games and those outcomes. He was impressed that Clay had never felt the need to brag about beating a legend.
He took his place at the table with Clay Diamond and seven others and exhaled slowly as he saw that all of them had much larger stacks of chips than his $5000.00. Except for Diamond who only had $4000.00 in front of him. The boy attempted to shed his anxiety - to transfer it by saying to Diamond,"Tough table to be the small stack."
"I didn't bring these to lose boy." And that set a tone for the table. People were polite but not friendly and certainly not conversational.
The rest of the table was easy - poker players that had rarely entered a game where they did not have a huge advantage in chips. They counted on being able to over whelm their opponents at key moments in the game to take chips. Slow play would trim away their chips slowly but surely. Diamond was the only threat - real threat - at this table. But they would be in a race to land as many of the other fish at the table as possible.
He had 5 grand in chips and a professional poker player sitting across from him and a table full of innocent by-standers. He and Clay were never in the same pot together for long. Each took turns bowing out to let the other alone with the fish. One would bet double the blind and the other would quickly fold or else raise it three times the blind as if clearing his throat and saying, "I think me and my Aces will take this one."
It took hours and the fish kept having the pleasing habit of buying back in for more and more chips as their drinks got stronger and their good sense got weaker. The boy had more than tripled his money and Diamond had was up over $20 grand in chips. "Kid, it looks to be time to stop dancing."
That was far more overt than the young man had thought would happen. It was a courtesy that was appreciated. From that moment on they played their cards as they were dealt regardless of which of them seemed to have the better cards. The boy had been careful to not always stay in when he was strong earlier in the game. He was counting on that to have covered any tells he had about his cards. He finally got what he wanted. A game with a huge pile of chips in front of him and his mother no where to be found.
He took the whole table once with 2/6 of clubs when he flopped a straight flush. He was embarrassed at how much he had smiled at that. He wasn't too happy - he just looked as happy as we really was. And that is dangerous in life as well as poker. He shook his head as he realized just how much of his mothers' lessons he had learned.
He hit a straight again and folded out when Diamond bet heavy on an obvious flush. Once everybody folded out of the hand, Diamond did something he never did before. He showed the table that he only had a 7 / J off suit - no flush. He went hard after Diamond an hour later with his own flush only to find him holding four deuces that he had slow played from the start.
It went like that for hour after hour. He called when Diamond wanted him to and he folded when Diamond wanted him to and could never pull off a bluff again to save his life. His stack of chips got smaller and smaller as shoulders tensed into cords like steel.
Ginger watched as the boys brow formed a scowl. Frustration was obvious on the boy's face. It was not easy to look at. Part of the boy's charm had been that he was always so cool under pressure. People liked him like that. They liked him as the cool, calm young man who had all the answers beyond his years. Because people liked the image of him as strong and assured, they filled in the holes when he wasn't quite so confident or a little less than assured.
Diamond did not find him charming at all. Ginger saw it as it was happening. The boy was betting too heavy when he had it and the desperation in his eyes confirmed it. When the flop went against him his shoulder fell - telegraphing it to the whole room. Well, maybe not to the rubes, but to Diamond for sure.
If Diamond felt any affection or connection to him, it did not show. It did not manifest itself in a hesitation before grasping his chips. It was not in his voice when he raised the bet nor in his eyes when he stared over his cards. The boy's eyes glistened as his chips slowly made their way across the table to Diamond.
That was when it happened. That's when the boy showed how small he could be - how petty. His chips, the last of his chips, were in the center of the table. "Do you know who I am, Diamond? How welcome do you think you will be at these tables if you bust me here at my own Mother's game?"
The others at the table looked down at their own folded cards or into the amber liquid in their glasses - anything to look at to avoid his shame. Diamond looked up at him and shook his head. "Kid, the one sure way to piss your mother off is for me to not take every dime you brought to this table. Call."
And with that the last of his chips found their way to Diamond and he noticed that Ginger had appeared at his shoulder. . He rose up from the table and did not seem to notice that Ginger was not leading him to the door but to the bar. He was sitting there with a Scotch already in front of him without ever seeing the bartender move.
"I never saw it coming. I never saw it coming."
Ginger did him the courtesy of not smiling at him. "Drink your Scotch kid. Slowly. Its the good stuff. There is a lesson you need to learn here. What is it?"
He sipped his Scotch and found comfort in the carmel and vanilla and burn. "It was too easy. Diamond in town and Mom out of town. It was too easy."
Ginger still did not smile. "Son, Its bigger than that. Your mama out of town, Diamond in town, you finding a way past me to in here, you having all those back room games that nobody told your mama about, a table full of fish with only one other shark at that table, you having access to your mama's books. Son, the lesson is that it never all works out just right. Never. Unless it is for your mama. When it all works out just right, that's your mama playing god."
End Chapter 3
Thursday, September 12, 2013
Chapter 2 - A Real Talker
"Shooting me would be the stupidest thing you could ever do. Tell me why you won't shoot me."
"I should shoot ya for being just that smug. I won't shoot ya because there had to be a reason. My employers - the Neck-less," he stopped himself and smiled at that, amused with his own turn of phrase. You could tell that it was the first time he had thought of it. "They have 2 years worth of bets with you. Two years of loans made and paid. You were a good risk right up until you weren't no more."
The man with the gun talked faster and faster. The thoughts seemed to be running out of him just as they occurred to him.
"That is a long game you were playin'. Ya set it up slow. Bigger and bigger bets. Paying off losses on time or almost on time, ya got people to sorta kinda trust ya. Which is news since these kinds of people don't trust each other much less a white boy like you."
"Ya married the Farfenelli girl, what, 18 months ago? All that money to bank roll ya. At least that's what it looked like from a distance. But ya do a little digging and she don't know nothin' about her man's card playin' ways. That was why I came here. Thought the pressure of her coming home from the ski trip and finding us here talking would make you sweat even more. I might hold off on shooting ya just to find out if that was your intention all along."
"The girl doesn't figure into this. All I ask is that if you are gonna shoot me, don't leave a mess here for her to find. I don't want her to go through that. But don't make me disappear altogether either. I don't want her thinking I ran off on her. She is fragile that way. Doesn't think much of herself compared to her name or her money and me just up and disappearing would do her serious harm. Better she should have to come to the morgue and see my face with a new hole somewhere on it. She's strong that way. Took care of her daddy while cancer ate him up. She could handle that."
"Wait. The girl is incidental? You set this whole thing up to get me alone in a room with ya, and the one thing that actually gets me alone in the room with ya, is a rich girl that you just have the hots fer? Omigod! What if ... Didn't ya ever think about the Neckless holding her until ya paid yer debt? Jesus, what a donkey ass gamble."
"I didn't lay it down perfect. I know that. It took me five years to find you and another two to figure out how to have this conversation without your Neckless listening in. I need you. I can help you. And we can both be filthy stinking, stupid rich beyond anything your employers or my momma could ever hope to deal with. That's the pitch. That's the angle. That's the hook."
The man with the pistol smiled at the man who claims to be his brother.
"I don't have money. I don't have access to money and you run a long game to get me in front of ya with a gun pointed atcha. Ballsy. Ballsy play. But you still gotta come up with the money for the Neckless or you get hurt badly. Or my rep takes a hit. And I figure my reputation is important to ya. How ya figure the play from here?"
The cool man smiled, "What? You don't have that kind of money laying around for when family needs it?"
The man with the pistol raises his eyebrow again and leans back in his chair and sips his Scotch. He wanted to like this man. He was starting to like him despite himself. That is how a grifter is able to work best. They engender trust and good will just because they have that something... He wanted to like this man.
"Why, specifically, did you want to meet me?"
The gun was still in his hand. The camaraderie, the funny little exchanges, the jokes. The gun had never left his hand. His forefinger still rested just on the outside of the trigger guard. His eyes grew colder as a resolve reasserted itself.
"I ain't leaving without the money. Wash that idea out of your head. Now, the specific question I just asked. I am not a patient man. My... heritage... has been ... Maybe it hasn't been a secret, exactly, but not too many people have ever been able to pin a connection to me and your Momma's operation."
"I have known about you since I was 18 or so. Momma may have kept everything in her head but Daddy kept a diary. He wrote about you a whole lot. I was envious of him teaching you to shoot so young. You beat me to it by 5 full years. Didn't seem fair. Took me a while to figure out why that all happened."
"You were being groomed. Hell, I was being groomed. The family business was intricate. The need for manipulation and glad handing was there. But so was the need for a well placed bullet. You and I were being prepared to carry on what my Momma had started and what our Daddy thought was his."
"I walked away from it just like you never stepped up to it. It wasn't mine. I didn't want to be a piece to somebody's else's puzzle. But I would never have thought of myself that way if I had not seen the way they catered your whole life for you. They paid for the private schools, the shooting lessons, they covered for you when you had your run ins with the law. They paid for all those self defense classes that you were so good at. They also made sure you never got a legit shot at those UFC tryouts when you were a kid. Too much fame is not the thing for a shadow to have."
"That's what you were meant to be, by the way. My shadow. I would be the face of the family. I would hold office of some sort. Momma hoped for Governor. You would be the muscle from behind the scenes that nobody ever saw coming until it was just too damn late. And it would all have been tied together in blood."
"Perfect plan except our Daddy had to go and die so young. No continuity. Nothing to tie the two of us together. Hell, nothing to tie you to her. So you got to go off and make your own life years before I did. Just like the whole learning to shoot thing all over again."
"But to answer your question, Daddy kept a journal. Stupidest thing a crooked judge could ever do, but then our daddy wasn't the smartest of souls that crossed the surface of God's green earth. It laid out who you were and where you were staying and who all you knew way back then. With that, it was possible to track you down. Not easy, mind ya, but possible."
As he talked he got up from the desk and slowly moved over to the safe hidden behind the glasses where the stranger had poured the Scotch. He punched in the numbers and pulled out two thick stacks of bills and pulled a few bills from a third thick wad. He was very careful that his hand never strayed too closely to the pistol there in the safe. He tossed the money on the desk while never closing the safe. The hook was set or he was dead. A few dollars more would not make a difference.
The man with the pistol made his way out of the house and walked three blocks down to a car parked in the shadow of an old oak. The car was in front of yet another old house with an iron fence weaving with age around what used to be one of the nicest places to live in this ancient neighborhood. He plopped down in the passenger seat. He sighed deeply and shook his head as looked at the attractive red head behind the wheel.
She only glanced at him out of the corner of her eyes. She knew that after these visits he needed to feel alone even if he wasn't, so she gave him what space she could. He sighed again and she knew this was a queue for her. "Did he play the long lost brother bit like you thought he would?"
"Played it out better than I thought. Played like he didn't have the money right up to the very end. Ballsy little bastard. Have to give him that."
The red head nods and asks, "Do we need to have Jimmy come in and clean the place or did you keep your gloves on this time?"
"No. No. We don't need Jimmy. I let him live. Gonna let him live long enough to make us a great big pile of money. It won't be easy to kill him though. He is just so damn likable."
End Chapter Two
"I should shoot ya for being just that smug. I won't shoot ya because there had to be a reason. My employers - the Neck-less," he stopped himself and smiled at that, amused with his own turn of phrase. You could tell that it was the first time he had thought of it. "They have 2 years worth of bets with you. Two years of loans made and paid. You were a good risk right up until you weren't no more."
The man with the gun talked faster and faster. The thoughts seemed to be running out of him just as they occurred to him.
"That is a long game you were playin'. Ya set it up slow. Bigger and bigger bets. Paying off losses on time or almost on time, ya got people to sorta kinda trust ya. Which is news since these kinds of people don't trust each other much less a white boy like you."
"Ya married the Farfenelli girl, what, 18 months ago? All that money to bank roll ya. At least that's what it looked like from a distance. But ya do a little digging and she don't know nothin' about her man's card playin' ways. That was why I came here. Thought the pressure of her coming home from the ski trip and finding us here talking would make you sweat even more. I might hold off on shooting ya just to find out if that was your intention all along."
"The girl doesn't figure into this. All I ask is that if you are gonna shoot me, don't leave a mess here for her to find. I don't want her to go through that. But don't make me disappear altogether either. I don't want her thinking I ran off on her. She is fragile that way. Doesn't think much of herself compared to her name or her money and me just up and disappearing would do her serious harm. Better she should have to come to the morgue and see my face with a new hole somewhere on it. She's strong that way. Took care of her daddy while cancer ate him up. She could handle that."
"Wait. The girl is incidental? You set this whole thing up to get me alone in a room with ya, and the one thing that actually gets me alone in the room with ya, is a rich girl that you just have the hots fer? Omigod! What if ... Didn't ya ever think about the Neckless holding her until ya paid yer debt? Jesus, what a donkey ass gamble."
"I didn't lay it down perfect. I know that. It took me five years to find you and another two to figure out how to have this conversation without your Neckless listening in. I need you. I can help you. And we can both be filthy stinking, stupid rich beyond anything your employers or my momma could ever hope to deal with. That's the pitch. That's the angle. That's the hook."
The man with the pistol smiled at the man who claims to be his brother.
"I don't have money. I don't have access to money and you run a long game to get me in front of ya with a gun pointed atcha. Ballsy. Ballsy play. But you still gotta come up with the money for the Neckless or you get hurt badly. Or my rep takes a hit. And I figure my reputation is important to ya. How ya figure the play from here?"
The cool man smiled, "What? You don't have that kind of money laying around for when family needs it?"
The man with the pistol raises his eyebrow again and leans back in his chair and sips his Scotch. He wanted to like this man. He was starting to like him despite himself. That is how a grifter is able to work best. They engender trust and good will just because they have that something... He wanted to like this man.
"Why, specifically, did you want to meet me?"
The gun was still in his hand. The camaraderie, the funny little exchanges, the jokes. The gun had never left his hand. His forefinger still rested just on the outside of the trigger guard. His eyes grew colder as a resolve reasserted itself.
"I ain't leaving without the money. Wash that idea out of your head. Now, the specific question I just asked. I am not a patient man. My... heritage... has been ... Maybe it hasn't been a secret, exactly, but not too many people have ever been able to pin a connection to me and your Momma's operation."
"I have known about you since I was 18 or so. Momma may have kept everything in her head but Daddy kept a diary. He wrote about you a whole lot. I was envious of him teaching you to shoot so young. You beat me to it by 5 full years. Didn't seem fair. Took me a while to figure out why that all happened."
"You were being groomed. Hell, I was being groomed. The family business was intricate. The need for manipulation and glad handing was there. But so was the need for a well placed bullet. You and I were being prepared to carry on what my Momma had started and what our Daddy thought was his."
"I walked away from it just like you never stepped up to it. It wasn't mine. I didn't want to be a piece to somebody's else's puzzle. But I would never have thought of myself that way if I had not seen the way they catered your whole life for you. They paid for the private schools, the shooting lessons, they covered for you when you had your run ins with the law. They paid for all those self defense classes that you were so good at. They also made sure you never got a legit shot at those UFC tryouts when you were a kid. Too much fame is not the thing for a shadow to have."
"That's what you were meant to be, by the way. My shadow. I would be the face of the family. I would hold office of some sort. Momma hoped for Governor. You would be the muscle from behind the scenes that nobody ever saw coming until it was just too damn late. And it would all have been tied together in blood."
"Perfect plan except our Daddy had to go and die so young. No continuity. Nothing to tie the two of us together. Hell, nothing to tie you to her. So you got to go off and make your own life years before I did. Just like the whole learning to shoot thing all over again."
"But to answer your question, Daddy kept a journal. Stupidest thing a crooked judge could ever do, but then our daddy wasn't the smartest of souls that crossed the surface of God's green earth. It laid out who you were and where you were staying and who all you knew way back then. With that, it was possible to track you down. Not easy, mind ya, but possible."
As he talked he got up from the desk and slowly moved over to the safe hidden behind the glasses where the stranger had poured the Scotch. He punched in the numbers and pulled out two thick stacks of bills and pulled a few bills from a third thick wad. He was very careful that his hand never strayed too closely to the pistol there in the safe. He tossed the money on the desk while never closing the safe. The hook was set or he was dead. A few dollars more would not make a difference.
The man with the pistol made his way out of the house and walked three blocks down to a car parked in the shadow of an old oak. The car was in front of yet another old house with an iron fence weaving with age around what used to be one of the nicest places to live in this ancient neighborhood. He plopped down in the passenger seat. He sighed deeply and shook his head as looked at the attractive red head behind the wheel.
She only glanced at him out of the corner of her eyes. She knew that after these visits he needed to feel alone even if he wasn't, so she gave him what space she could. He sighed again and she knew this was a queue for her. "Did he play the long lost brother bit like you thought he would?"
"Played it out better than I thought. Played like he didn't have the money right up to the very end. Ballsy little bastard. Have to give him that."
The red head nods and asks, "Do we need to have Jimmy come in and clean the place or did you keep your gloves on this time?"
"No. No. We don't need Jimmy. I let him live. Gonna let him live long enough to make us a great big pile of money. It won't be easy to kill him though. He is just so damn likable."
End Chapter Two
Friday, August 16, 2013
Chapter 1 - Nice to Meetcha
"Hi. Come on in. Don't be nervous. Go ahead and sit down in that big old chair behind your desk and make yourself comfortable. Don't worry about that pistol in the drawer on the left. It ain't there no more. Hell, if you notice, the letter opener in that cubbie up front is gone too."
He sat there behind his desk just starting to sweat. He had not had the chance to take his overcoat off and for sure that played a part. The fact that a pistol was pointed at him did nothing to mitigate the heat. He sat and looked at the drawer to his left. He saw that it was still a little bit open and had no doubt that his gun was long gone from there anyway.
"I ain't here to kill ya but kill ya is what I will do if I have ta. You understand that part of this don't ya, sir? I mean, you been in a spot where violence was never the desired outcome, but you had had to make up you're mind beforehand, that if it came to that, you would do it without hesitation?" The stranger waited a bit as if he actually wanted a reply, and in fairness, maybe he did, but when one was not forthcoming he proceeded with, " I am here to collect $26,000 or else to hurt ya in such a way that no other degenerate gambler would ever again wind up in dept to my employers for such a sum."
They eyed each other for a beat and the man with the gun smiled just slightly. Might not have been a smile at all but just a crinkle of the wrinkles around the mouth. The man with the gun pointed at him pursed his lips against a smile, but his eyes, even in the fear of the moment, gave away a sense of amusement. "Yeah, I know. Nothing that happens to you will ever stop another degenerate bastard. We all assume that we'll hit the flush on the next card."
With that, the stranger moved gracefully to the bar and set out two glasses and began to look over the liquor. "If we really knew how to manage the odds, we wouldn't wind up in the debt of men who have no style, or grace, or ...necks."
The stranger settled on the Scotch. Specifically he poured two fingers in each glass of the MacAllen 25. "Ya know, somebody who has this kind of taste in Scotch, and the means to buy it, shouldn't ever have to go to a loan shark to cover gambling debts." He sat one glass on the desk and sat down across from his unwilling companion and stared at the slightly smokey, vanilla spirit. "But I guess if Momma don't know about hubby's debts and she holds the purse strings, it can get interesting, am I right?"
The man with the gun smelled the Scotch and then sat it back down without taking a sip. The man with his life replaying before him spoke in a whisper very much like someone watching a movie in a crowded theatre, "You know your Scotch and your gambling."
"And you are one cool son of a bitch. Most folks faced with a pistol in the hands of a man prepared to use it, they get cotton mouthed. They can talk mind ya, beg even, but not without coughing or some such first. You, sir, are a bit different, aren't ya?"
The man smiled first and then laughed that quiet kind of laugh that only comes out at things that aren't really funny. "Never bet big on something when you aren't willing to go all in."
"That sir, is toast-able. To going all in." And with that the two men at opposite ends of the gun sipped their Scotch. The drink had no burn. It was smoke and caramel and vanilla and old leather and warm goodness that trailed down the throat and found the back of the conscious mind and just slightly numbed the lips. It is the perfect drink, especially if it might be the last sip you ever take.
"What if I don't have the money? I know you can hurt me. I have thought that I had prepared myself for the hurt, but apparently I am even more of a coward than I thought. I am terrified. But in a cool way." And he smiled at that.
The man with the gun smiled back and shook his head. "I hate causing the pain, if that matters to ya. I have dreams about the things I have done to men and women like you. I hear things just as I start to go to sleep that keep me awake nights. Surely we can find some source of money to spare us both that nightmare? You seem like the smart type, present situation excluded."
The cool man sipped his Scotch again and just before he swallowed, inhaled a short, quick breath and let the vapors from the liquor waft its way throughout his consciousness and seep slowly out as he exhaled through his nose. "I am not afraid of dying. Never thought I would be able to say that honestly. I mean, you have to have a good poker face to do what I do for as long as I have done it. But looking like you don't mind and actually not giving a shit are two wholeheartedly different things. Do you understand that?" Before the man with the gun can answer, the cool man continues, "Of course you do. You've had all your chips in the center of the table with just a Jack high. The only thing keeping those other assholes at the table from calling with a pair of sixes is that ice cold, dead eyed look."
The man with the gun smiles again and sips his Scotch. He settles back in his chair and makes a show of making himself comfortable. Like any story teller, he can tell when a story is about to start. He crosses his legs and rests the pistol on his knee in a way that says, "Go ahead with your story. But...it better be a good story."
"Don't mistake me. I am scared to death of the things you could do to me - to hurt me. My imagination is of all these creative things you could do. The fact that you seem so intelligent is a concern to me. I know the stupid can be cruel, but the idea of someone like you turning ... The fact that you bring reason and patience to the issue - that's just the scariest damn thing I can think of."
The man with the pistol sat there - said nothing - gave no indication that the words meant anything to him. The cool man brought himself back to the problem at hand. "Twenty-six thousand dollars, huh?
The man with the gun raised one eye brow to acknowledge the number. The first sign of impatience. Circling around to the beginning of the conversation would not be a good thing. The cool man gulps the last of his Scotch and sits his drink down with just a hint of amber coloring the glass. "You know how I learned to play cards? My momma taught me. Good ole Texas housewife who knew her way around a deck of cards. And the frailty of human will. She could size a person up in minutes and fillet them if she needed to. Woman never paid full retail for anything in her life. Every charity she supported got all kinds of donations from businessmen who were never known to be a soft touch for anybody else. She just knew things about people and she played on that."
"Fortunately for my daddy, she loved him. Oh, she still maneuvered him around the board like everybody else, but she was supremely careful that he should never be aware of it. That took more work but she must have felt he was worth it. He died a happy man who thought he had made all his own decisions his whole life. Not many of us get that kind of peace on this side of the grave."
"I came along and she knew she loved me when I was a baby. When I got to the point that I had ideas of my own, she started having her doubts. When she realized I could see the strings she was pulling, she had to pause and reassess the whole situation. I was thirteen years old when I started calling bluffs nobody had ever called on her before. Three months after my 13th birthday she took me to a card game at Sleepy Jay's bar. She never questioned the fact that I already knew the difference between a straight and flush but just sat me down in front of middle aged men with 300 dollars and a hard look and a simple command, "Make money. Don't lose money."
"I sat down there and made 2700 dollars from old men who had never lost that much so fast from somebody so young. They called me when I wanted them to and they folded out when I had nothing. And the only two people who weren't surprised were me and Momma"
The man with the pistol smiled at him. It was a smile that said, "I ain't gonna ask the question. Just come on with the answer/"
"Yeah, I know. I said Momma taught me how to play cards and it is the truth. Just not all that accurate. I learned to play cards by hanging around the courthouse long after I was supposed to be in bed. She ran games out of the courthouse where my daddy was the county magistrate. I watched lawyers and district attorneys and folks serving 30 days play for dollars, dope, and favors. And my momma took a cut of all of it. I remember them all being so polite. Poker players are almost always the most polite."
The man with the gun laughed loudly while shaking his head. "You are a cold and cool son of a Bitch. Your momma is Ms. Wetta out of Katy, TX? Who set up shop in Houston 50 years ago? Who ran a little bit of Vegas for all the refinery workers down there in the gulf?"
"Yessir. That's my momma. Wonderful woman. Ahead of her time, really. She realized that all the money was green whether it came from black folks, brown folks, or the lily white folks who came to Daddy's re-election parties. I learned the game when I was 6 years old from the older black gentlemen who sat behind bars and played for cigarettes and rock candy. The rock candy was my lure, as you might imagine."
The man with the pistol sips the last of his Scotch. He smiles at the cool man but says nothing. The cool man sees the silence and raises an eyebrow. The man with the pistol blinks and inhales deeply. "Rumor was that a young black girl got herself shot at one of Ms. Wetta's games."
The cool man takes two fingers and pushes his glass towards the man with the pistol and smiles while waiting on his re-fill. "That was your Momma that died the night Junior Robinson had a full house beaten by quad sixes. They say he was just too fat for anybody to have found that itty bitty Derringer on him."
The man with the pistol sits very still. He knows now that $26,000.00 is nothing to this man. And he knows that it was no accident that brought him here this night. All alone with a man who was expecting him all along. His hand felt sweaty around the hilt of the pistol. But the best cards aren't always the winning hand.
"There is something else you should know about your daddy the Judge..."
"My daddy liked pretty young black girls and you and I are probably brothers." Called and raised.
"Nice to meet ya big brother. Now, why shouldn't I just shoot ya right betwixt the damn eyes and be on my merry way?"
End Chapter One
He sat there behind his desk just starting to sweat. He had not had the chance to take his overcoat off and for sure that played a part. The fact that a pistol was pointed at him did nothing to mitigate the heat. He sat and looked at the drawer to his left. He saw that it was still a little bit open and had no doubt that his gun was long gone from there anyway.
"I ain't here to kill ya but kill ya is what I will do if I have ta. You understand that part of this don't ya, sir? I mean, you been in a spot where violence was never the desired outcome, but you had had to make up you're mind beforehand, that if it came to that, you would do it without hesitation?" The stranger waited a bit as if he actually wanted a reply, and in fairness, maybe he did, but when one was not forthcoming he proceeded with, " I am here to collect $26,000 or else to hurt ya in such a way that no other degenerate gambler would ever again wind up in dept to my employers for such a sum."
They eyed each other for a beat and the man with the gun smiled just slightly. Might not have been a smile at all but just a crinkle of the wrinkles around the mouth. The man with the gun pointed at him pursed his lips against a smile, but his eyes, even in the fear of the moment, gave away a sense of amusement. "Yeah, I know. Nothing that happens to you will ever stop another degenerate bastard. We all assume that we'll hit the flush on the next card."
With that, the stranger moved gracefully to the bar and set out two glasses and began to look over the liquor. "If we really knew how to manage the odds, we wouldn't wind up in the debt of men who have no style, or grace, or ...necks."
The stranger settled on the Scotch. Specifically he poured two fingers in each glass of the MacAllen 25. "Ya know, somebody who has this kind of taste in Scotch, and the means to buy it, shouldn't ever have to go to a loan shark to cover gambling debts." He sat one glass on the desk and sat down across from his unwilling companion and stared at the slightly smokey, vanilla spirit. "But I guess if Momma don't know about hubby's debts and she holds the purse strings, it can get interesting, am I right?"
The man with the gun smelled the Scotch and then sat it back down without taking a sip. The man with his life replaying before him spoke in a whisper very much like someone watching a movie in a crowded theatre, "You know your Scotch and your gambling."
"And you are one cool son of a bitch. Most folks faced with a pistol in the hands of a man prepared to use it, they get cotton mouthed. They can talk mind ya, beg even, but not without coughing or some such first. You, sir, are a bit different, aren't ya?"
The man smiled first and then laughed that quiet kind of laugh that only comes out at things that aren't really funny. "Never bet big on something when you aren't willing to go all in."
"That sir, is toast-able. To going all in." And with that the two men at opposite ends of the gun sipped their Scotch. The drink had no burn. It was smoke and caramel and vanilla and old leather and warm goodness that trailed down the throat and found the back of the conscious mind and just slightly numbed the lips. It is the perfect drink, especially if it might be the last sip you ever take.
"What if I don't have the money? I know you can hurt me. I have thought that I had prepared myself for the hurt, but apparently I am even more of a coward than I thought. I am terrified. But in a cool way." And he smiled at that.
The man with the gun smiled back and shook his head. "I hate causing the pain, if that matters to ya. I have dreams about the things I have done to men and women like you. I hear things just as I start to go to sleep that keep me awake nights. Surely we can find some source of money to spare us both that nightmare? You seem like the smart type, present situation excluded."
The cool man sipped his Scotch again and just before he swallowed, inhaled a short, quick breath and let the vapors from the liquor waft its way throughout his consciousness and seep slowly out as he exhaled through his nose. "I am not afraid of dying. Never thought I would be able to say that honestly. I mean, you have to have a good poker face to do what I do for as long as I have done it. But looking like you don't mind and actually not giving a shit are two wholeheartedly different things. Do you understand that?" Before the man with the gun can answer, the cool man continues, "Of course you do. You've had all your chips in the center of the table with just a Jack high. The only thing keeping those other assholes at the table from calling with a pair of sixes is that ice cold, dead eyed look."
The man with the gun smiles again and sips his Scotch. He settles back in his chair and makes a show of making himself comfortable. Like any story teller, he can tell when a story is about to start. He crosses his legs and rests the pistol on his knee in a way that says, "Go ahead with your story. But...it better be a good story."
"Don't mistake me. I am scared to death of the things you could do to me - to hurt me. My imagination is of all these creative things you could do. The fact that you seem so intelligent is a concern to me. I know the stupid can be cruel, but the idea of someone like you turning ... The fact that you bring reason and patience to the issue - that's just the scariest damn thing I can think of."
The man with the pistol sat there - said nothing - gave no indication that the words meant anything to him. The cool man brought himself back to the problem at hand. "Twenty-six thousand dollars, huh?
The man with the gun raised one eye brow to acknowledge the number. The first sign of impatience. Circling around to the beginning of the conversation would not be a good thing. The cool man gulps the last of his Scotch and sits his drink down with just a hint of amber coloring the glass. "You know how I learned to play cards? My momma taught me. Good ole Texas housewife who knew her way around a deck of cards. And the frailty of human will. She could size a person up in minutes and fillet them if she needed to. Woman never paid full retail for anything in her life. Every charity she supported got all kinds of donations from businessmen who were never known to be a soft touch for anybody else. She just knew things about people and she played on that."
"Fortunately for my daddy, she loved him. Oh, she still maneuvered him around the board like everybody else, but she was supremely careful that he should never be aware of it. That took more work but she must have felt he was worth it. He died a happy man who thought he had made all his own decisions his whole life. Not many of us get that kind of peace on this side of the grave."
"I came along and she knew she loved me when I was a baby. When I got to the point that I had ideas of my own, she started having her doubts. When she realized I could see the strings she was pulling, she had to pause and reassess the whole situation. I was thirteen years old when I started calling bluffs nobody had ever called on her before. Three months after my 13th birthday she took me to a card game at Sleepy Jay's bar. She never questioned the fact that I already knew the difference between a straight and flush but just sat me down in front of middle aged men with 300 dollars and a hard look and a simple command, "Make money. Don't lose money."
"I sat down there and made 2700 dollars from old men who had never lost that much so fast from somebody so young. They called me when I wanted them to and they folded out when I had nothing. And the only two people who weren't surprised were me and Momma"
The man with the pistol smiled at him. It was a smile that said, "I ain't gonna ask the question. Just come on with the answer/"
"Yeah, I know. I said Momma taught me how to play cards and it is the truth. Just not all that accurate. I learned to play cards by hanging around the courthouse long after I was supposed to be in bed. She ran games out of the courthouse where my daddy was the county magistrate. I watched lawyers and district attorneys and folks serving 30 days play for dollars, dope, and favors. And my momma took a cut of all of it. I remember them all being so polite. Poker players are almost always the most polite."
The man with the gun laughed loudly while shaking his head. "You are a cold and cool son of a Bitch. Your momma is Ms. Wetta out of Katy, TX? Who set up shop in Houston 50 years ago? Who ran a little bit of Vegas for all the refinery workers down there in the gulf?"
"Yessir. That's my momma. Wonderful woman. Ahead of her time, really. She realized that all the money was green whether it came from black folks, brown folks, or the lily white folks who came to Daddy's re-election parties. I learned the game when I was 6 years old from the older black gentlemen who sat behind bars and played for cigarettes and rock candy. The rock candy was my lure, as you might imagine."
The man with the pistol sips the last of his Scotch. He smiles at the cool man but says nothing. The cool man sees the silence and raises an eyebrow. The man with the pistol blinks and inhales deeply. "Rumor was that a young black girl got herself shot at one of Ms. Wetta's games."
The cool man takes two fingers and pushes his glass towards the man with the pistol and smiles while waiting on his re-fill. "That was your Momma that died the night Junior Robinson had a full house beaten by quad sixes. They say he was just too fat for anybody to have found that itty bitty Derringer on him."
The man with the pistol sits very still. He knows now that $26,000.00 is nothing to this man. And he knows that it was no accident that brought him here this night. All alone with a man who was expecting him all along. His hand felt sweaty around the hilt of the pistol. But the best cards aren't always the winning hand.
"There is something else you should know about your daddy the Judge..."
"My daddy liked pretty young black girls and you and I are probably brothers." Called and raised.
"Nice to meet ya big brother. Now, why shouldn't I just shoot ya right betwixt the damn eyes and be on my merry way?"
End Chapter One
Wednesday, August 7, 2013
Fight! Fight! Fight! Fight!
The earliest fight of my life is not one that I can remember. I have no recall whatsoever but I have been told of it often. It involved what could be construed as a deadly weapon - a forklift to be honest. My opponent - who had tortured me for months and caused my mother to respond in anger at the sound of his name - was left bloody and broken and missing two teeth. I was not brutal. I had not learned that in my life yet.
But again, I don't remember this fight. I have had it told to me with pride and defiance and certainty that only comes from love and anger. I don't remember his name but I remember us being friends. I like the fact that memories of joy and happiness and contentment are the things that I summon up when I try to find this memory that simply isn't.
Of course I was only 3. My mother pointed out that the other boy was 5 and had been a terror who sent me home crying on more than one occasion. My mom used to watch us playing from the kitchen window of our trailer out across the trailer park to the front yard of his family's trailer and she said that our fun would invariably end with him slapping or kicking or punching me until I ran home to her.
She gave me no sympathy except to clean any blood or dirt away to be sure that I was not seriously hurt. To all of my complaints she simply responded that it would continue until I put a stop to it. Unknown to me she had gone to the boy's mother at least twice before to discuss the issue but was greeted with the response of "Boys will be boys," and a vacant grin known only to lobotomized mental patients. At least that is how my mother described the woman. She may have been biased.
My dad was co-owner of a sawmill and before that worked at a mobile home manufacturing plant. Some of my earliest memories are of the gigantic forklifts used to move material around. These were not the tiny little things that I would later use in various warehouses as an adult. Nor were they the things you see on cable TV that are the size of a small house (although to a 3 year old that is exactly what they looked like).
These things were big enough to move huge bundles of lumber and later logs. It was a no brainer for my parents to purchase a large (a third of my body size at the time) forklift toy made by Tonka. I had days and days of fun playing in the shadow of our trailer stacking and unstacking whatever items found their way into my imagination.
Apparently this was the perfect confluence of selfishness and independance and bravery. The five year old put in to take my forklift from me. According to my mom, he could not get it out of my hands, so he settled on kicking over the sticks I had been stacking up like logs (just like my dad, don't ya know) and then he slapped my face. My mom describes this like it was a John Wayne movie or a Clint Eastwood movie or an Arnold Schwarzenegger movie depending on the decade in which she has recited the tale. She says I turned around, spat on the ground, and then came around with the Tonka forklift for all my three year old limbs were worth.
The poor kid's mouth exploded with blood and at least two teeth. He lay there on the ground with me standing over him. Momma said she ran out to see to him and that my eyes were the size of saucers. Apparently his mother watched from her kitchen window too because she came running over to see to him too. I just stood there breathing deeply with the bloody forklift still clutched in my right hand. The woman was hysterical and crying and her son was crying. She and my momma both felt around inside his mouth to be sure the teeth had come out cleanly and that none of the rest were broken.
A day later, after the boy had been to a dentist to make sure that everything was alright, the woman came over to talk with my mother about the incident. She pointed out how much pain her son had been put through. She talked about the cost of the dentist. She talked about the danger of metal toys and the possibility of serious injuries. My mother made sympathetic clucking noises of support without any commitment or real comment. Finally the woman could stand it no more and said,"Dammit, Carolyn, what are you going to do about that boy?"
With the most idiotic smile that a woman of her intelligence could manage, my mother replied, "Oh, well, boys will be boys, won't they?"
I won't be including any of the fights between Mark and me here. Its not that I feel any sense of privacy about those times that my brother and I visited violence upon each other, but rather, if I am going to take the time to recollect all the times I have been a bad brother, this would be an altogether different story and probably much longer. I will stick to folks I am not related to or at least not related that closely.
The next fight I can remember fairly clearly. I was in kindergarten. Never really liked my kindergarten teacher or her teacher's aide very much. If you know anything about me at all, it does not surprise you that I had a problem with authority. My father could command me - I stood in awe of him for most of my life (and his since it was so short). I get how we are to interact with God from how I revere my dad. My mother did not command the same fear or reverence. I somehow saw all of her flaws without ever being mindful of his. Even as I grew older and my dad grew less perfect, I chose not to focus on the clay, but looked higher. My mom never got such a pass.
Later in my life as a teenager, Tanner (officially my agriculture education teacher /unofficially my mentor), could control me. He figured out that logic would work on me. It had to be logic masquerading as jokes and simplistic questions, dull edged and rounded, so as to not give a surface to support anger or indignation. But logic worked on me.
Funnily enough, Tanner's wife was my first grade teacher and first hand witness to the third fight on this list. But the second happened while I suffered under the type of woman who did not believe my five year old protestations that I did not like peach cocktail. She was the type that forced me to take a taste instead of maintaining the peaceful detente that the peaches and I had reached on our own. I had the joy of watching with a perfect view as my stomach refused to be intimidated with the rest of me and threw up on her shoes. You have not been mocked until a puke smeared five year old has smiled up at you while you stand in vomit soaked stockings.
One day before recess, we were told that we were not allowed to fight or wrestle on the playground. Apparently some of my brethren had engaged in this activity the day before. I marvel at how memory works since I have no memory of the day before this day. I don't know what I did that day except I remember remembering that I did not know anything about what the teacher's aide was talking about. I remember not remembering but I don't remember the day before the day that I remember. Got that?
Anyway, I was running down to my favorite half buried tractor tire on the playground (did I mention I went to kindergarten in deep South Georgia?) when Darrell O'Steen turned around in mid run and tackled me. He got both hands all the way around me and was laughing like a maniac. I had just managed to struggle free when the teacher's aide called both of our names, announced we had been warned, and had us both sit for the remainder of the play period. I remember angrily through tears trying to inform this stupid, stupid woman of her mistake. Trying in vain to point out that I was attacked and was the victim in this instance and feeling the burning white hot angry self-righteousness when it fell on deaf ears. Any other authority figure victimized by my quick wit, or acid tongue, or break room lawyering, you have this woman to thank.
Like I said earlier, Tanner's wife was my first grade teacher for my third fight that I can recall. We, my classmates and me, had spent the year working around Eddie. Eddie was exceedingly stupid and the poster child for social promotions in school. I have told several people that Eddie was still in first grade even though he was 23 years old. I have been told by several people that this is a gross exaggeration. Maybe I have let my sense of hyperbole get away with me but I still swear he was shaving by the time the rest of us had the misfortune to get to know him. Our play time was enjoyable to the extent that Eddie could be distracted with rainbows or butterflies. If Eddie became aware of us, it would be to pull things off of us the way he did the butterflies.
Roughly three quarters of the year had gone by when Eddie finally targeted me. I remember making the decision to not back down. It seemed so simple then. I back down now and let him have his way and I go sit quietly to the side. Okay. What do I do tomorrow? And the day after that?
I have no idea what the argument was about but I said no or yes or whatever the hell the prelude was to him grabbing me. I must have seen how he grabbed and slung others. I remember knowing to keep my arms in and up with my fists in front of my chest. He grabbed my collar like he had so many times before with so many of his other non- shaving classmates before and my right hand shot up under his chin. I still smile when I think of that clicking noise. Nobody wants their teeth to click like that.
I turned my head down and watched my fists pound into this stomach again and again as his loud teeth caused him to forget to sling me away for the tiniest of moments.
When he remembered, it was to sling me into one of the pine trees on the playground. Coincidentally, it was against this same tree that one of my senior pictures was taken. It was nice having the tree behind me. Clarified the argument about running away with a logic that I might not have mastered otherwise. Instead I stood my ground and traded blows with a boy I swear could have legally driven us to the emergency room after it was all over. Apparently we both had given into the moment and were swinging blindly with no intention of stopping since Mrs. Tanner and her aide could not get us to stop and were forced to wait until we were spent on the ground and simply dragged us apart by our feet.
I never got punished at school because my dad pointed out that I should have been given my merit badge for bear wrestling when he saw Eddie and finally learned how old he was. The school was too happy to pretend that the whole thing had never happened.
I was in the second grade when I was in my fourth fight. It was, unsurprisingly, on the football field. I say unsurprisingly because all of us first grade boys longed for the day we could take second grade PE and play football with Mr. Bussey as our quarterback. When the fight finally happened at the end of the year, I have no idea where Mr. Bussey was. Must have been called away for something.
I didn't want to get into a fight I couldn't win. And it also took a major threat to get me steamed enough to throw the first punch. I remember tolerating Lamar. I remember being pushed into the wall of the restroom on the way to the urinals by a boy who was going thru the second grade for the second time.
It happened all year and I was not alone. I remember others having to submit to tiny, petty indignities that may not have seemed to be all that big a deal to the one boy who was larger than all the rest of us.
I remember my own petty revenge that backfired. I had a birthday party. It was a party that was to have enough guys there to play a full game of football with one guy playing QB for both teams. And everybody said they would come. And everybody took evil delight in the fact that Lamar was not invited no matter how much he liked football. The day of the party came and most everybody was already there when my mother called me to the phone.
It was Lamar. He asked if it was my birthday. He asked if there was a party. He asked if we were planning on playing football. I said yes to all of his questions while trying to find my resolve to tell him that it would be a cold day in hell before he would be welcome at my house. He said," That sounds like so much fun. Ray, would it be okay if I came and played with you guys?"
I couldn't tell him no. I could not be that cruel. I was not yet brutal. He came over and despite a few friends literally asking me, "What the hell.." even as 2nd graders, we played football for hours and had fun.
On the last day of 2nd grade we fought at school. Fight is too strong a word. It was mainly a wrestling match. Remembering the best tumbles of Ricky Steamboat and Superfly got me out of the tough parts. And it established that I was not one that he could push around any more.
And then he had to fight Joey Thomas. And Stacy Anderson, and Donnie Ray Anderson, and Scotty Ivey, and Donny Burch, and Wesley Gilliard. Nobody was letting this opportunity pass. And a teacher could not be found. I still don't know if we were lucky or if the teachers were having a moment like my mother all those years before. We came away thinking something was settled. We came away with PRIDE.
Fighting the world for so long since with no clear cut signs of accomplishment, I wonder sometimes if we should not have sent Lamar some sort of card or cake or even cash. It was one of the few times the world made sense and so closely resembled a fairy tale
.
But again, I don't remember this fight. I have had it told to me with pride and defiance and certainty that only comes from love and anger. I don't remember his name but I remember us being friends. I like the fact that memories of joy and happiness and contentment are the things that I summon up when I try to find this memory that simply isn't.
Of course I was only 3. My mother pointed out that the other boy was 5 and had been a terror who sent me home crying on more than one occasion. My mom used to watch us playing from the kitchen window of our trailer out across the trailer park to the front yard of his family's trailer and she said that our fun would invariably end with him slapping or kicking or punching me until I ran home to her.
She gave me no sympathy except to clean any blood or dirt away to be sure that I was not seriously hurt. To all of my complaints she simply responded that it would continue until I put a stop to it. Unknown to me she had gone to the boy's mother at least twice before to discuss the issue but was greeted with the response of "Boys will be boys," and a vacant grin known only to lobotomized mental patients. At least that is how my mother described the woman. She may have been biased.
My dad was co-owner of a sawmill and before that worked at a mobile home manufacturing plant. Some of my earliest memories are of the gigantic forklifts used to move material around. These were not the tiny little things that I would later use in various warehouses as an adult. Nor were they the things you see on cable TV that are the size of a small house (although to a 3 year old that is exactly what they looked like).
These things were big enough to move huge bundles of lumber and later logs. It was a no brainer for my parents to purchase a large (a third of my body size at the time) forklift toy made by Tonka. I had days and days of fun playing in the shadow of our trailer stacking and unstacking whatever items found their way into my imagination.
Apparently this was the perfect confluence of selfishness and independance and bravery. The five year old put in to take my forklift from me. According to my mom, he could not get it out of my hands, so he settled on kicking over the sticks I had been stacking up like logs (just like my dad, don't ya know) and then he slapped my face. My mom describes this like it was a John Wayne movie or a Clint Eastwood movie or an Arnold Schwarzenegger movie depending on the decade in which she has recited the tale. She says I turned around, spat on the ground, and then came around with the Tonka forklift for all my three year old limbs were worth.
The poor kid's mouth exploded with blood and at least two teeth. He lay there on the ground with me standing over him. Momma said she ran out to see to him and that my eyes were the size of saucers. Apparently his mother watched from her kitchen window too because she came running over to see to him too. I just stood there breathing deeply with the bloody forklift still clutched in my right hand. The woman was hysterical and crying and her son was crying. She and my momma both felt around inside his mouth to be sure the teeth had come out cleanly and that none of the rest were broken.
A day later, after the boy had been to a dentist to make sure that everything was alright, the woman came over to talk with my mother about the incident. She pointed out how much pain her son had been put through. She talked about the cost of the dentist. She talked about the danger of metal toys and the possibility of serious injuries. My mother made sympathetic clucking noises of support without any commitment or real comment. Finally the woman could stand it no more and said,"Dammit, Carolyn, what are you going to do about that boy?"
With the most idiotic smile that a woman of her intelligence could manage, my mother replied, "Oh, well, boys will be boys, won't they?"
I won't be including any of the fights between Mark and me here. Its not that I feel any sense of privacy about those times that my brother and I visited violence upon each other, but rather, if I am going to take the time to recollect all the times I have been a bad brother, this would be an altogether different story and probably much longer. I will stick to folks I am not related to or at least not related that closely.
The next fight I can remember fairly clearly. I was in kindergarten. Never really liked my kindergarten teacher or her teacher's aide very much. If you know anything about me at all, it does not surprise you that I had a problem with authority. My father could command me - I stood in awe of him for most of my life (and his since it was so short). I get how we are to interact with God from how I revere my dad. My mother did not command the same fear or reverence. I somehow saw all of her flaws without ever being mindful of his. Even as I grew older and my dad grew less perfect, I chose not to focus on the clay, but looked higher. My mom never got such a pass.
Later in my life as a teenager, Tanner (officially my agriculture education teacher /unofficially my mentor), could control me. He figured out that logic would work on me. It had to be logic masquerading as jokes and simplistic questions, dull edged and rounded, so as to not give a surface to support anger or indignation. But logic worked on me.
Funnily enough, Tanner's wife was my first grade teacher and first hand witness to the third fight on this list. But the second happened while I suffered under the type of woman who did not believe my five year old protestations that I did not like peach cocktail. She was the type that forced me to take a taste instead of maintaining the peaceful detente that the peaches and I had reached on our own. I had the joy of watching with a perfect view as my stomach refused to be intimidated with the rest of me and threw up on her shoes. You have not been mocked until a puke smeared five year old has smiled up at you while you stand in vomit soaked stockings.
One day before recess, we were told that we were not allowed to fight or wrestle on the playground. Apparently some of my brethren had engaged in this activity the day before. I marvel at how memory works since I have no memory of the day before this day. I don't know what I did that day except I remember remembering that I did not know anything about what the teacher's aide was talking about. I remember not remembering but I don't remember the day before the day that I remember. Got that?
Anyway, I was running down to my favorite half buried tractor tire on the playground (did I mention I went to kindergarten in deep South Georgia?) when Darrell O'Steen turned around in mid run and tackled me. He got both hands all the way around me and was laughing like a maniac. I had just managed to struggle free when the teacher's aide called both of our names, announced we had been warned, and had us both sit for the remainder of the play period. I remember angrily through tears trying to inform this stupid, stupid woman of her mistake. Trying in vain to point out that I was attacked and was the victim in this instance and feeling the burning white hot angry self-righteousness when it fell on deaf ears. Any other authority figure victimized by my quick wit, or acid tongue, or break room lawyering, you have this woman to thank.
Like I said earlier, Tanner's wife was my first grade teacher for my third fight that I can recall. We, my classmates and me, had spent the year working around Eddie. Eddie was exceedingly stupid and the poster child for social promotions in school. I have told several people that Eddie was still in first grade even though he was 23 years old. I have been told by several people that this is a gross exaggeration. Maybe I have let my sense of hyperbole get away with me but I still swear he was shaving by the time the rest of us had the misfortune to get to know him. Our play time was enjoyable to the extent that Eddie could be distracted with rainbows or butterflies. If Eddie became aware of us, it would be to pull things off of us the way he did the butterflies.
Roughly three quarters of the year had gone by when Eddie finally targeted me. I remember making the decision to not back down. It seemed so simple then. I back down now and let him have his way and I go sit quietly to the side. Okay. What do I do tomorrow? And the day after that?
I have no idea what the argument was about but I said no or yes or whatever the hell the prelude was to him grabbing me. I must have seen how he grabbed and slung others. I remember knowing to keep my arms in and up with my fists in front of my chest. He grabbed my collar like he had so many times before with so many of his other non- shaving classmates before and my right hand shot up under his chin. I still smile when I think of that clicking noise. Nobody wants their teeth to click like that.
I turned my head down and watched my fists pound into this stomach again and again as his loud teeth caused him to forget to sling me away for the tiniest of moments.
When he remembered, it was to sling me into one of the pine trees on the playground. Coincidentally, it was against this same tree that one of my senior pictures was taken. It was nice having the tree behind me. Clarified the argument about running away with a logic that I might not have mastered otherwise. Instead I stood my ground and traded blows with a boy I swear could have legally driven us to the emergency room after it was all over. Apparently we both had given into the moment and were swinging blindly with no intention of stopping since Mrs. Tanner and her aide could not get us to stop and were forced to wait until we were spent on the ground and simply dragged us apart by our feet.
I never got punished at school because my dad pointed out that I should have been given my merit badge for bear wrestling when he saw Eddie and finally learned how old he was. The school was too happy to pretend that the whole thing had never happened.
I was in the second grade when I was in my fourth fight. It was, unsurprisingly, on the football field. I say unsurprisingly because all of us first grade boys longed for the day we could take second grade PE and play football with Mr. Bussey as our quarterback. When the fight finally happened at the end of the year, I have no idea where Mr. Bussey was. Must have been called away for something.
I didn't want to get into a fight I couldn't win. And it also took a major threat to get me steamed enough to throw the first punch. I remember tolerating Lamar. I remember being pushed into the wall of the restroom on the way to the urinals by a boy who was going thru the second grade for the second time.
It happened all year and I was not alone. I remember others having to submit to tiny, petty indignities that may not have seemed to be all that big a deal to the one boy who was larger than all the rest of us.
I remember my own petty revenge that backfired. I had a birthday party. It was a party that was to have enough guys there to play a full game of football with one guy playing QB for both teams. And everybody said they would come. And everybody took evil delight in the fact that Lamar was not invited no matter how much he liked football. The day of the party came and most everybody was already there when my mother called me to the phone.
It was Lamar. He asked if it was my birthday. He asked if there was a party. He asked if we were planning on playing football. I said yes to all of his questions while trying to find my resolve to tell him that it would be a cold day in hell before he would be welcome at my house. He said," That sounds like so much fun. Ray, would it be okay if I came and played with you guys?"
I couldn't tell him no. I could not be that cruel. I was not yet brutal. He came over and despite a few friends literally asking me, "What the hell.." even as 2nd graders, we played football for hours and had fun.
On the last day of 2nd grade we fought at school. Fight is too strong a word. It was mainly a wrestling match. Remembering the best tumbles of Ricky Steamboat and Superfly got me out of the tough parts. And it established that I was not one that he could push around any more.
And then he had to fight Joey Thomas. And Stacy Anderson, and Donnie Ray Anderson, and Scotty Ivey, and Donny Burch, and Wesley Gilliard. Nobody was letting this opportunity pass. And a teacher could not be found. I still don't know if we were lucky or if the teachers were having a moment like my mother all those years before. We came away thinking something was settled. We came away with PRIDE.
Fighting the world for so long since with no clear cut signs of accomplishment, I wonder sometimes if we should not have sent Lamar some sort of card or cake or even cash. It was one of the few times the world made sense and so closely resembled a fairy tale
.
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